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- Dictionaryre·veal/rəˈvēl/
verb
- 1. make (previously unknown or secret information) known to others: "Brenda was forced to reveal Robbie's whereabouts" Similar Opposite
noun
- 1. (in a movie or television show) a final revelation of information that has previously been kept from the characters or viewers: "the big reveal at the end of the movie answers all questions"
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The meaning of REVEAL is to make known through divine inspiration. How to use reveal in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Reveal.
REVEAL definition: 1. to make known or show something that is surprising or that was previously secret: 2. to allow…. Learn more.
When you make something visible or make it public information, you reveal it. For example, if you want to plan a picnic, wait until forecasters reveal the weather that is predicted.
reveal, disclose, divulge share the meaning of making known something previously concealed or secret. To reveal is to uncover as if by drawing away a veil: The fog lifted and revealed the harbor. To disclose is to lay open and thereby invite inspection: to disclose the plans of an organization.
n. The making known of an important, secret, or salient occurrence, such as the revealing of a major development, plot twist, or visual effect in a movie: "Seeing [the Wiz] in human form in the first act diminishes the power of the reveal in the second" (Bob Verini).
REVEAL meaning: 1. to make known or show something that is surprising or that was previously secret: 2. to allow…. Learn more.
Definition of reveal verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.
REVEAL definition: 1. to give someone a piece of information that is surprising or that was previously secret: 2. to…. Learn more.
REVEAL meaning: 1 : to make (something) known; 2 : to show or prove that (someone or something) is a particular type of person or thing often + to be often + as.
The earliest known use of the noun reveal is in the late 1500s. OED's earliest evidence for reveal is from 1596, in the writing of Anthony Copley, writer and conspirator. It is also recorded as a verb from the Middle English period (1150—1500). reveal is formed within English, by conversion.